Masters of the Theatre

Home > Other > Masters of the Theatre > Page 96
Masters of the Theatre Page 96

by Delphi Classics


  As erst upon my troubled sight ye stole;

  Shall I this time attempt to clasp, to hold ye?

  Still for the fond illusion yearns my soul?

  Ye press around! Come then, your captive hold me,

  As upward from the vapory mist ye roll;

  Within my breast youth’s throbbing pulse is bounding,

  Fann’d by the magic breath your march surrounding.

  Shades fondly loved appear, your train attending,

  And visions fair of many a blissful day;

  First-love and friendship their fond accents blending,

  Like to some ancient, half-expiring lay;

  Sorrow revives, her wail of anguish sending

  Back o’er life’s devious labyrinthine way,

  And names the dear ones, they whom Fate bereaving

  Of life’s fair hours, left me behind them grieving.

  They hear me not my later cadence singing,

  The souls to whom my earlier lays I sang;

  Dispersed the throng, their severed flight now winging;

  Mute are the voices that responsive rang.

  For stranger crowds the Orphean lyre now stringing,

  E’en their applause is to my heart a pang;

  Of old who listened to my song, glad hearted,

  If yet they live, now wander widely parted.

  A yearning long unfelt, each impulse swaying,

  To yon calm spirit-realm uplifts my soul;

  In faltering cadence, as when Zephyr playing,

  Fans the Æolian harp, my numbers roll;

  Tear follows tear, my steadfast heart obeying

  The tender impulse, loses its control;

  What I possess as from afar I see;

  Those I have lost become realities to me.

  PROLOGUE FOR THE THEATRE

  MANAGER. DRAMATIC POET. MERRYMAN

  MANAGER

  Ye twain, in trouble and distress

  True friends whom I so oft have found,

  Say, for our scheme on German ground,

  What prospect have we of success?

  Fain would I please the public, win their thanks;

  They live and let live, hence it is but meet.

  The posts are now erected, and the planks,

  And all look forward to a festal treat.

  Their places taken, they, with eyebrows rais’d,

  Sit patiently, and fain would be amaz’d.

  I know the art to hit the public taste,

  Yet ne’er of failure felt so keen a dread;

  True, they are not accustomed to the best,

  But then appalling the amount they’ve read.

  How make our entertainment striking, new,

  And yet significant and pleasing too?

  For to be plain, I love to see the throng,

  As to our booth the living tide progresses;

  As wave on wave successive rolls along,

  And through heaven’s narrow portal forceful presses;

  Still in broad daylight, ere the clock strikes four,

  With blows their way toward the box they take;

  And, as for bread in famine, at the baker’s door,

  For tickets are content their necks to break.

  Such various minds the bard alone can sway,

  My friend, oh work this miracle today!

  POET

  Oh of the motley throng speak not before me,

  At whose aspect the Spirit wings its flight!

  Conceal the surging concourse, I implore thee,

  Whose vortex draws us with resistless might.

  No, to some peaceful heavenly nook restore me,

  Where only for the bard blooms pure delight,

  Where love and friendship yield their choicest blessing,

  Our heart’s true bliss, with godlike hand caressing.

  What in the spirit’s depths was there created,

  What shyly there the lip shaped forth in sound;

  A failure now, with words now fitly mated,

  In the wild tumult of the hour is drown’d;

  Full oft the poet’s thought for years hath waited

  Until at length with perfect form ’tis crowned;

  What dazzles, for the moment born, must perish;

  What genuine is posterity will cherish.

  MERRYMAN

  This cant about posterity I hate;

  About posterity were I to prate,

  Who then the living would amuse? For they

  Will have diversion, ay, and ’tis their due.

  A sprightly fellow’s presence at your play,

  Methinks should also count for something too;

  Whose genial wit the audience still inspires,

  Knows from their changeful mood no angry feeling;

  A wider circle he desires,

  To their heart’s depths more surely thus appealing.

  To work, then! Give a master-piece, my friend;

  Bring Fancy with her choral trains before us,

  Sense, reason, feeling, passion, but attend!

  Let folly also swell the tragic chorus.

  MANAGER

  In chief, of incident enough prepare!

  A show they want, they come to gape and stare.

  Spin for their eyes abundant occupation,

  So that the multitude may wondering gaze,

  You by sheer bulk have won your reputation,

  The man you are all love to praise.

  By mass alone can you subdue the masses,

  Each then selects in time what suits his bent.

  Bring much, you something bring for various classes,

  And from the house goes every one content.

  You give a piece, abroad in pieces send it!

  ’Tis a ragout — success must needs attend it;

  ’Tis easy to serve up, as easy to invent.

  A finish’d whole what boots it to present!

  Full soon the public will in pieces rend it.

  POET

  How mean such handicraft as this you cannot feel!

  How it revolts the genuine artist’s mind!

  The sorry trash in which these coxcombs deal,

  Is here approved on principle, I find.

  MANAGER

  Such a reproof disturbs me not a whit!

  Who on efficient work is bent,

  Must choose the fittest instrument.

  Consider! ’tis soft wood you have to split;

  Think too for whom you write, I pray!

  One comes to while an hour away;

  One from the festive board, a sated guest;

  Others, more dreaded than the rest,

  From journal-reading hurry to the play.

  As to a masquerade, with absent minds, they press,

  Sheer curiosity their footsteps winging;

  Ladies display their persons and their dress,

  Actors unpaid their service bringing.

  What dreams beguile you on your poet’s height?

  What puts a full house in a merry mood?

  More closely view your patrons of the night!

  The half are cold, the half are rude.

  One, the play over, craves a game of cards;

  Another a wild night in wanton joy would spend.

  Poor fools the muses’ fair regards

  Why court for such a paltry end?

  I tell you, give them more, still more, ’tis all I ask,

  Thus you will ne’er stray widely from the goal;

  Your audience seek to mystify, cajole; —

  To satisfy them — that’s a harder task.

  What ails thee? art enraptured or distressed?

  POET

  Depart! elsewhere another servant choose.

  What! shall the bard his godlike power abuse?

  Man’s loftiest right, kind nature’s high bequest,

  For your mean purpose basely sport away?

  Whence comes his mastery o’er the human breast,

  Whence o’er the
elements his sway,

  But from the harmony that, gushing from his soul,

  Draws back into his heart the wondrous whole?

  With careless hand when round her spindle, Nature

  Winds the interminable thread of life;

  When ‘mid the clash of Being every creature

  Mingles in harsh inextricable strife;

  Who deals their course unvaried till it falleth,

  In rhythmic flow to music’s measur’d tone?

  Each solitary note whose genius calleth,

  To swell the mighty choir in unison?

  Who in the raging storm sees passion low’ring?

  Or flush of earnest thought in evening’s glow?

  Who every blossom in sweet spring-time flowering

  Along the loved one’s path would strow?

  Who, Nature’s green familiar leaves entwining,

  Wreathes glory’s garland, won on every field?

  Makes sure Olympus, heavenly powers combining?

  Man’s mighty spirit, in the bard reveal’d!

  MERRYMAN

  Come then, employ your lofty inspiration,

  And carry on the poet’s avocation,

  Just as we carry on a love affair.

  Two meet by chance, are pleased, they linger there,

  Insensibly are link’d, they scarce know how;

  Fortune seems now propitious, adverse now,

  Then come alternate rapture and despair;

  And ’tis a true romance ere one’s aware.

  Just such a drama let us now compose.

  Plunge boldly into life-its, depths disclose!

  Each lives it, not to many is it known,

  ‘Twill interest wheresoever seiz’d and shown;

  Bright pictures, but obscure their meaning:

  A ray of truth through error gleaming,

  Thus you the best elixir brew,

  To charm mankind, and edify them too.

  Then youth’s fair blossoms crowd to view your play,

  And wait as on an oracle; while they,

  The tender souls, who love the melting mood,

  Suck from your work their melancholy food;

  Now this one, and now that, you deeply stir,

  Each sees the working of his heart laid bare.

  Their tears, their laughter, you command with ease,

  The lofty still they honor, the illusive love.

  Your finish’d gentlemen you ne’er can please;

  A growing mind alone will grateful prove.

  POET

  Then give me back youth’s golden prime,

  When my own spirit too was growing,

  When from my heart th’ unbidden rhyme

  Gush’d forth, a fount for ever flowing;

  Then shadowy mist the world conceal’d,

  And every bud sweet promise made,

  Of wonders yet to be reveal’d,

  As through the vales, with blooms inlaid,

  Culling a thousand flowers I stray’d.

  Naught had I, yet a rich profusion!

  The thirst for truth, joy in each fond illusion.

  Give me unquell’d those impulses to prove; —

  Rapture so deep, its ecstasy was pain,

  The power of hate, the energy of love,

  Give me, oh give me back my youth again!

  MERRYMAN

  Youth, my good friend, you certainly require

  When foes in battle round are pressing,

  When a fair maid, her heart on fire,

  Hangs on your neck with fond caressing,

  When from afar, the victor’s crown,

  To reach the hard-won goal inciteth;

  When from the whirling dance, to drown

  Your sense, the nights carouse inviteth.

  But the familiar chords among

  Boldly to sweep, with graceful cunning,

  While to its goal, the verse along

  Its winding path is sweetly running;

  This task is yours, old gentlemen, today;

  Nor are you therefore less in reverence held;

  Age does not make us childish, as folk say,

  It finds us genuine children e’en in eld.

  MANAGER

  A truce to words, mere empty sound,

  Let deeds at length appear, my friends!

  While idle compliments you round,

  You might achieve some useful ends.

  Why talk of the poetic vein?

  Who hesitates will never know it;

  If bards ye are, as ye maintain,

  Now let your inspiration show it.

  To you is known what we require,

  Strong drink to sip is our desire;

  Come, brew me such without delay!

  Tomorrow sees undone, what happens not today;

  Still forward press, nor ever tire!

  The possible, with steadfast trust,

  Resolve should by the forelock grasp;

  Then she will never let go her clasp,

  And labors on, because she must.

  On German boards, you’re well aware,

  The taste of each may have full sway;

  Therefore in bringing out your play,

  Nor scenes nor mechanism spare!

  Heaven’s lamps employ, the greatest and the least,

  Be lavish of the stellar lights,

  Water, and fire, and rocky heights,

  Spare not at all, nor birds, nor beast.

  Thus let creation’s ample sphere

  Forthwith in this our narrow booth appear,

  And with considerate speed, through fancy’s spell,

  Journey from heaven, thence through the world, to hell!

  PROLOGUE IN HEAVEN

  THE LORD. THE HEAVENLY HOSTS. Afterward MEPHISTOPHELES

  The three Archangels come forward

  RAPHAEL

  The Sun, in ancient guise, competing

  With brother spheres in rival song,

  With thunder-march, his orb completing,

  Moves his predestin’d course along;

  His aspect to the powers supernal

  Gives strength, though fathom him none may;

  Transcending thought, the works eternal

  Are fair as on the primal day.

  GABRIEL

  With speed, thought baffling, unabating,

  Earth’s splendor whirls in circling flight;

  Its Eden-brightness alternating

  With solemn, awe-inspiring night;

  Ocean’s broad waves in wild commotion,

  Against the rocks’ deep base are hurled;

  And with the spheres, both rock and ocean

  Eternally are swiftly whirled.

  MICHAEL

  And tempests roar in emulation

  From sea to land, from land to sea,

  And raging form, without cessation,

  A chain of wondrous agency,

  Full in the thunder’s path careering,

  Flaring the swift destructions play;

  But, Lord, Thy servants are revering

  The mild procession of thy day.

  THE THREE

  Thine aspect to the powers supernal

  Gives strength, though fathom thee none may;

  And all thy works, sublime, eternal,

  Are fair as on the primal day.

  MEPHISTOPHELES

  Since thou, O Lord, approachest us once more,

  And how it fares with us, to ask art fain,

  Since thou hast kindly welcom’d me of yore,

  Thou see’st me also now among thy train.

  Excuse me, fine harangues I cannot make,

  Though all the circle look on me with scorn;

  My pathos soon thy laughter would awake,

  Hadst thou the laughing mood not long forsworn.

  Of suns and worlds I nothing have to say,

  I see alone mankind’s self-torturing pains.

  The little world-god still the self-same stamp retains,

  And
is as wondrous now as on the primal day.

  Better he might have fared, poor wight,

  Hadst thou not given him a gleam of heavenly light;

  Reason he names it, and doth so

  Use it, than brutes more brutish still to grow.

  With deference to your grace, he seems to me

  Like any long-legged grasshopper to be,

  Which ever flies, and flying springs,

  And in the grass its ancient ditty sings.

  Would he but always in the grass repose!

  In every heap of dung he thrusts his nose.

  THE LORD

  Hast thou naught else to say? Is blame

  In coming here, as ever, thy sole aim?

  Does nothing on the earth to thee seem right?

  MEPHISTOPHELES

  No, Lord! I find things there, as ever, in sad plight.

  Men, in their evil days, move my compassion;

  Such sorry things to plague is nothing worth.

  THE LORD

  Know’st thou my servant, Faust?

  MEPHISTOPHELES

  The doctor?

  THE LORD

  Right.

  MEPHISTOPHELES

  He serves thee truly in a wondrous fashion.

  Poor fool! His food and drink are not of earth.

  An inward impulse hurries him afar,

  Himself half conscious of his frenzied mood;

  From heaven claimeth he the fairest star,

  And from the earth craves every highest good,

  And all that’s near, and all that’s far,

  Fails to allay the tumult in his blood.

  THE LORD

  Though in perplexity he serves me now,

  I soon will lead him where more light appears;

  When buds the sapling, doth the gardener know

  That flowers and fruit will deck the coming years!

  MEPHISTOPHELES

  What wilt thou wager? Him thou yet shall lose,

  If leave to me thou wilt but give,

  Gently to lead him as I choose!

  THE LORD

  So long as he on earth doth live,

  So long ’tis not forbidden thee.

  Man still must err, while he doth strive.

  MEPHISTOPHELES

  I thank you; for not willingly

  I traffic with the dead, and still aver

  That youth’s plump blooming cheek I very much prefer.

  I’m not at home to corpses; ’tis my way,

  Like cats with captive mice to toy and play.

  THE LORD

  Enough! ’tis granted thee! Divert

  This mortal spirit from his primal source;

  Him, canst thou seize, thy power exert

  And lead him on thy downward course,

  Then stand abash’d, when thou perforce must own,

  A good man in his darkest aberration,

  Of the right path is conscious still.

  MEPHISTOPHELES

  ’Tis done! Full soon thou’lt see my exultation;

 

‹ Prev